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Recently, in Zhang et al. (2020), it was found that in rapidly rotating turbulent Rayleigh-Benard convection (RBC) in slender cylindrical containers (with diameter-to-height aspect ratio $Gamma=1/2$) filled with a small-Prandtl-number fluid ($Pr approx0.8$), the Large Scale Circulation (LSC) is suppressed and a Boundary Zonal Flow (BZF) develops near the sidewall, characterized by a bimodal PDF of the temperature, cyclonic fluid motion, and anticyclonic drift of the flow pattern (with respect to the rotating frame). This BZF carries a disproportionate amount ($>60%$) of the total heat transport for $Pr < 1$ but decreases rather abruptly for larger $Pr$ to about $35%$. In this work, we show that the BZF is robust and appears in rapidly rotating turbulent RBC in containers of different $Gamma$ and in a broad range of $Pr$ and $Ra$. Direct numerical simulations for $0.1 leq Pr leq 12.3$, $10^7 leq Ra leq 5times10^{9}$, $10^{5} leq 1/Ek leq 10^{7}$ and $Gamma$ = 1/3, 1/2, 3/4, 1 and 2 show that the BZF width $delta_0$ scales with the Rayleigh number $Ra$ and Ekman number $Ek$ as $delta_0/H sim Gamma^{0} Pr^{{-1/4, 0}} Ra^{1/4} Ek^{2/3}$ (${Pr<1, Pr>1}$) and the drift frequency as $omega/Omega sim Gamma^{0} Pr^{-4/3} Ra Ek^{5/3}$, where $H$ is the cell height and $Omega$ the angular rotation rate. The mode number of the BZF is 1 for $Gamma lesssim 1$ and $2 Gamma$ for $Gamma$ = {1,2} independent of $Ra$ and $Pr$. The BZF is quite reminiscent of wall mode states in rotating convection.
For rapidly rotating turbulent Rayleigh--Benard convection in a slender cylindrical cell, experiments and direct numerical simulations reveal a boundary zonal flow (BZF) that replaces the classical large-scale circulation. The BZF is located near the
Using direct numerical simulations, we study rotating Rayleigh-Benard convection in a cylindrical cell for a broad range of Rayleigh, Ekman, and Prandtl numbers from the onset of wall modes to the geostrophic regime, an extremely important one in geo
We report an experimental study aiming to clarify the role of boundary conditions (BC) in high Rayleigh number $10^8 < {rm{Ra}} < 3 times 10^{12}$ turbulent thermal convection of cryogenic helium gas. We switch between BC closer to constant heat flux
The effect of rotation on the boundary layers (BLs) in a Rayleigh-Benard (RB) system at a relatively low Rayleigh number, i.e. $Ra = 4times10^7$, is studied for different Pr by direct numerical simulations and the results are compared with laminar BL
We report heat transfer and temperature profile measurements in laboratory experiments of rapidly rotating convection in water under intense thermal forcing (Rayleigh number $Ra$ as high as $sim 10^{13}$) and unprecedentedly strong rotational influen